Many are left perplexed by the recent acrimonious interchange between the USA and Cuba triggered by the USA offer of assistance to Cuba after the devastation caused by hurricanes Gustav and Ike. Given so much human suffering on the island, most just can’t comprehend the diplomatic obstacles preventing the delivery of much needed assistance to the citizens of Cuba. The Cuban regime has refused delivery of US assistance, as reported in an article titled “US aid 'insults' Cuba” by the Barbados newspaper NATION NEWS, stating that it is a matter of Cuba’s dignity,
Before additional comment on the Cuban response, it should be restated (see CubaRespondeInternational - Should the US temporarily lift the embargo to help ameliorate the devastation caused by Gustav and Ike?) that during this post-hurricanes time, it is a mistake on the part of the USA to maintain restrictions on remittances and traveling to Cuba. These should be lifted, at least for a short time, so families, always the best source of support, can help. One would imagine that the Cuban government, which relies so heavily on the remittances from the exile community, would have lobbied for the elimination of these measures; but that is not what one hears from the ruling class in the island. Instead, they clamor for lifting of the US embargo that they call blockade.
Returning to Cuba’s reaction to US aid, as one can read in the article “US aid 'insults' Cuba”, the Castro regime deemed "contemptuous" the initial response from the US of some $100,000. And since then, the American government has offered $6.3 million (see Pride keeps storm aid from Cuba) and still a similar reaction from Cuba: silence about the aid but vociferous pronouncements about the need to lift the embargo.
Apparently the Cuban regime is only concerned about foreign reaction and wants to shame the Bush administration into lifting the embargo. They intend to achieve this by given notoriety to the misery left by the hurricanes. By stressing that eradication of the embargo is the only help they need, they hope that the US citizens and the whole world will demand lifting the embargo so aid can reach the sufferers. It must be repeated that the Cuban citizen is not informed of these shenanigans.
This Cuban rejection that emphasizes the embargo probably responds to two motivations.
The first is political. The elimination of the embargo would benefit the Castro gerontocracy. Imagine, Castro who has outlasted nine American presidents (Somehow, to clutch to power for 50 years as Castro has, is considered a virtue in many circles), a defeated the embargo would be trumpeted as the one of the lasts remnants of the Yanqui imperialists agenda.
Second, there is the financial bonanza to Cuba. Cuba now has to pay cash for products that it buys in the US (now Cuba’s fifth largest trading partner), but if the embargo is lifted, Cuba will acquire these goods and will not pay for them as attested by Cuba’s dismal international payment tract record, The latest example of this notorious delinquent behavior is Japan who had to suspend insuring transactions with Cuba because Cuba's failure to pay for Japanese imports.
The Cuban government is willing to thwart the much needed aid offered by the US, just so the hierarchy of the Castro regime score political points and financial gains.
At a time when the citizens in Cuba are suffering the consequences of two devastating natural disasters, there is no room for politics. Cuba needs to allow the US assistance, and the US should lift the restrictions on remittances and travels, at least for a few months.
Jose A Hernandez, MD
President, CubaResponde
In a follow-up post the decision of the Cuban government of rejecting aid from all but two member states (Belgium and Spain) of the European Union will be discussed.
----------------------------------------------
Swamped by chest-high flooding caused by recent hurricanes, the humble residents of this desolate fishing village on Cuba's southern coast found one small cause for celebration recently: homemade ice cream.
On a clattering, old metal contraption rigged up in a drab concrete compound, Marlen Vargas López, a smiling soul with close-cropped hair, whipped up a fresh batch and pulled a lever to fill cone after cone with chocolate, the flavor of the day.
''It's refreshing,'' said one young man, stopped in front of the store in the scorching afternoon sun. ``At least it relieves the heat.''
The ice-cream treat was about all there was for sale at El Recreo, one of the few shops open in the dismal location south of Havana. Clara Balladares Gomes, another store clerk, said there were no snacks, no bottled water and no soft drinks at the rundown outlet.
While the flooding from Hurricanes Gustav and Ike has receded, filthy pools of stagnant water still lined the streets in front of the wood shack homes on a recent afternoon, giving off a stench.
The shanties were scarcely habitable before the western region of Cuba -- from the Gulf of Batabanó to the agriculture-rich province of Pinar del Río -- was pummeled by back-to-back hurricanes within eight days beginning Aug. 30. Now, the homes are musty, and many roofs leak when it rains.
Spotting newcomers in the street, a middle-aged woman in worn shorts trailed after the visitors, offering to provide overnight accommodations and meals at a ''casa particular,'' or private home that takes in guests.
Now, more than ever, she could use the money.
THE DEVASTATION
The twin natural disasters may be the worst to ever hit the communist island, with preliminary damage estimates for the two storms reaching an estimated $5 billion. According to reports in the Cuban newspaper Opciones, more than 444,000 homes were damaged, with some 63,249 destroyed. The electric grid was badly crippled. Gustav wiped out more than 800 tons of premium Cuban tobacco.
Numerous other crops also have been damaged. Last week, along a main highway in Pinar del Río, a small group of field workers, kneeling in a field of shallow water, used their hands to pull plants by the roots. One weary worker lifted his head and explained that much of the crop ``is damaged.''
Hurricane preparedness and massive evacuations clearly helped to minimize human injuries. Even hotel rooms on the island include detailed information on what to do in case of a hurricane. Several locals said they are used to the storms and closely monitor their tracks to know if they need to respond.
THE RELIEF EFFORT
Despite the devastation in the village of Surgidero de Batabanó, small boys -- the sons of local fishermen -- played in the street, merrily sloshing in filthy puddles.
Elsewhere, the government seemed to be working hard on the relief effort. In tourist-popular Viñales last week, many government workers joined in a cleanup, and workers from the electrical company were out in full force in a bid to restore power, erecting new poles and stringing lines.
Cuban officials blame whatever shortcomings are encountered on the U.S. embargo.
In the state newspaper Granma, an article said that a half-century economic war against the island will make it more difficult to rebuild, given that Cuba is a small country with limited financial resources.
But the government has reported little about the repeated offers of aid by the United States, which have been consistently turned down.
In the remote area of Surgidero de Batabanó, there was little sign of government aid on a recent afternoon, although two large tractor-trailer trucks, loaded with building blocks, rumbled through town on a delivery.
Even so, the residents of Surgidero de Batabanó count themselves relatively lucky compared with their neighbors.
The village, which sits about 30 miles south of Havana, serves as a launching point for ferries to the Isla de la Juventud, or Isle of Youth, a popular tourist destination that was devastated by the two hurricanes.
The island, off Cuba's south coast, remains in the dark after the consecutive storms knocked out electricity.
A COMMUNITY IN RUIN
Formerly known as the Isle of Pines, the island has a prison that once served as a cell for a young revolutionary named Fidel Castro. After a failed attack on the Moncada army barracks in Santiago de Cuba on July 26, 1953, Castro and his accomplices were put on trial for the insurrection against Fulgencio Batista's government. At the trial, he declared he had no fear of prison, declaring that, ``History will absolve me.''
Most of the private homes on the isle that take in guests were among those leveled, making it difficult for residents who relied on precious tourist dollars. According to Cuban press reports, 80 percent of the poultry farming on the Isle of Youth also was seriously affected.
No one knows how long it will be before the isle will be able to restore enough infrastructure to attract tourists, who head there for its age-old cave paintings and outstanding coral reefs. But, for now, many travel officials are steering tourists away.
At Havana's airport last week, a ticket agent for Cubana airlines urged against visiting the Isle of Youth.
''Why would you want to go there?'' she asked. ``It's 100 percent finished.''
----------------------------
Escríbanos con sus opiniones a cubaresponde@cubaresponde.org
Las cartas deberán de incluir el título del articulo, y el nombre completo y ciudad del autor. Algunas de estas serán publicadas como comentarios al final del artículo.